WASHINGTON, DC -- Moderator Bob Shieffer told the candidates in last night's
Presidential debate that Social Security was "running out of money."
This is false.

According to the Social Security Trustees' Report, the standard source for
economists as well as both the Bush Administration and Kerry Campaign, the
program can pay all promised benefits without any changes at all for the next 38
years. Beyond that, it could still pay a benefit larger (in real,
inflation-adjusted dollars) than beneficiaries enjoy today -- indefinitely.

"It is unfortunate that what tens of millions of Americans heard about
Social Security last night is an urban legend," said Mark Weisbrot,
co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

"If Social Security were a private rather than a public entity, it would
actually be able to sue journalists for statements like this and win," he
added.

Weisbrot is co-author, with Dean Baker, of Social Security: the Phony Crisis
(2000, University of Chicago Press)

According to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, the program is in
even better shape: it can pay all promised benefits for the next 50 years.

But even according to the official Trustees' numbers, which are universally
accepted as the basis for planning, the program is more financially sound than
it has been through most of its entire history. To cover any shortfall that may
occur over the next 75 years would require less than the tax increases in each
of the decades of the 1950s, 60s, 70s, or 80s.

Furthermore, the average wage -- again, in real, inflation-adjusted dollars
-- is expected to be about 45 percent higher four decades from now than it is
today. Therefore any additional taxes -- on the order of 2 percent -- that might
be needed to fund retirees who are living longer would not be much of a burden
for our children, as Mr. Schieffer also indicated.